Spain’s economy is currently booming, fueled largely by tourism; really, it is the main driver of growth, accounting for, well, over 12% of GDP and providing employment for roughly 3 million.
It’s quite a wave! A wave that absorbed many who were displaced after the real estate market crashed in 2008. As a result, Spain has become a significant tourist hub, and some estimate maybe up to 100 million visitors could come in 2025.
But, that said, Marko Jukic at Bismarck Analysis (and others, of course) suggests this surge, while boosting GDP, may be a quick fix only, involving long-term risks and become a tourism trap. It could potentially keep Spain stuck in a low-productivity cycle of economic dependence.
Tourism has served as an economic lifeline for southern European countries, like Spain, Greece, and Portugal, ever since the Euro crisis in the early 2010s. Experts discuss how tourism has shifted these nations’ balance of payments from deficits to surpluses in their study Blessing or Curse? The Rise of Tourism-Led Growth in Europe’s Southern Periphery.
In Spain, the sector has become a place for low-skilled workers to gain employment, namely, those affected by the collapse of the construction industry. This pretty much goes hand-in-hand with Spain’s relative advantage—a pleasant climate and beautiful coastline—making it quite an inviting place for global travelers.
The economic impact cannot be denied or overlooked. Either directly or indirectly, tourism accounts for, give or take, 15–25% of employment in southern Europe, and fueled Spain’s recognition by The Economist as the top-performing developed economy in 2023. All the same, this dependence raises questions about sustainability and future prosperity. As Jukic pointedly states, “No country has ever been made rich by tourism.”
Although tourism inflates GDP, it introduces serious drawbacks that diminish the quality of life for the locals who live there. Consider noise, the congestion of cities, the overcrowding, plus the rising housing costs, worsened by the need to accommodate as many as 100 million tourists each year, and its clear communities are feeling the strain.
The housing market is in crisis, which, if the city builds more housing, would be solved (kind of). But the tourism-driven demand does make it harder, because it means many locals are being priced out of their own towns and cities.
Jukic describes mass tourism as something which turns nations into “unskilled landowners and servants.” Property owners are obviously benefiting from the spending by tourists. But the majority—millions who work in hospitality, taking low wages—are facing job uncertainty and mediocre salaries.
This highlights a basic structural problem. Tourism is labor-intensive but low in productivity, requiring vast amounts of resources but only for limited financial rewards.
Experts have a warning about the consequences of mass tourism; they claim it restructures economies around sectors that have low value added. This leaves them in a vulnerable state to external factors, such as political instability, climate change, or, say, pandemics.

